City Directories and History: William Walter Houseal was born in Newberry County (then District) on the 15th day of August, 1818. He died at his home in the town of Newberry on the 1st day of November, 1889. The funeral services were held in the Lutheran Church on November 2nd, and he was buried in Bosemont Cemetery.
W. W. Houseal was Sheriff during the war and at the close. J. Middleton Maffett, an officer in the army and while in service, was elected Sheriff in 1864, but died in hospital while on his way home to take charge of the office. Next after Mr. Houseal was Thomas M. Paysinger, who beat Gen. Kinard in the race for the office in 1860. However, owing to some Ku Klux, or to some other troubles in which Paysinger became involved, Gen. Kinard, Coroner, acted as Sheriff for some time. Afterwards Paysinger being relieved of his trouble acted as Sheriff until the close of his term. Carrington succeeded. After him came Daniel B. Wheeler, who was Sheriff for eight years, from 1878 to 1880. Mr. Wheeler was succeeded by the present incumbent, W. W. Kiser, in 1880, who is now (1893) serving his third term.
His ancestors were German. John Houseal, his grandfather, was one of the original settlers of the “Dutch Fork.” John Houseal, his father, was an only son. He married Margaret Counts, the daughter of Colonel John Counts, and by this union there were five children, two sons and three daughters. John Houseal died in 1824, at the age of twenty-seven years, when William Walter was at the age of sis years, and was buried on his plantation, which is now owned by Mrs. Jane Barre. The death of his only brother left William Walter the sole male who bore the family name. He often remarked that he owed much in life to the careful training of a pious mother. She died in her fifty-sixth year.
The name was originally spelled Hausihl; then changes were made until it became Houseal. The father of William Walter wrote on the preface page of a text-book—he was a school* master—the following, in a plain, bold hand: “John Houseal, his book: April the 2nd, 1815.” This little scrap of paper —- the only token of his father that remained to William Walter out of the wreck of time, and it is still preserved in the family as an heirloom.
He was married December 2nd, 1841, to Elizabeth C. Barre,. daughter of Matthias Barre, who survives him. As a result of this union eight children were born to them- six of whom still survive, four sons and two daughters, namely: John Irving, a machinist in Memphis, Tennessee; James Emlon, a merchant in Cedartown, Georgia; William Preston, one of the publishers of tho Lutheran Visitor and of the Herald and News, and W. Gustavo, a physician of Newberry. Of the daughters, Mary E. is tho wife of D. Julius Hentz, of Pomaria, and Mattie V., the wife of Rev. J. Q. Wertz, of North Carolina. Frances Cornelia died in her twenty-first year, in 1867, and Edward Julius in his twenty-fourth year, in 1883.
There were thirty-eight grandchildren, twenty-seven of whom are now (1892) living, and one great-grandchild. He was educated at the Classical Institute, Lexington, S. C., and taught school several years. He united with the Lutheran Church at the age of seventeen, and was confirmed in St John’s, having thus been a church member for fifty-four years.
At the time of his marriage he was living in the Pomaria section, but in 1844 he moved to the Beth Eden neighborhood, being one of the founders of the Beth Eden Lutheran Church. In 1850 he removed to Florida, remaining there a short time. Returning to this county, in January, 1853, he moved to the town of Newberry, where he resided continuously to the time of his death.
He was one of the original members of the Newberry Lutheran Church, and when the congregation was organized, in 1853, he was elected one of the officers of the church, serving as such to the end of his career, being an elder at the time of his death.
In 1855 he was elected Sheriff of Newberry County, after a hotly contested race, defeating his opponent by a large majority. He served one term—till 1859—and was .again, in 1863, elected to that office. Under the law at that time a Sheriff could not succeed himself in office. For two years, 1866-68, he held the office of County Assessor. He had begun merchandising in Newberry in 1853, and for thirty years he followed that pursuit In 1862 he volunteered in the Confederate service, but after a short time, his health failing, he was discharged without his request
Upon the death of Mr. J. K. G. Nance he was appointed Auditor of Newberry, and was recommended at three successive primaries for continuance in that position. In token of his efficiency and acceptability as a public official, and of the esteem and confidence of those among whom he had lived for three score years and ten, in the primary election in 1888 he was nominated without opposition. He was serving his third regular term when his usefulness was stopped by death.
These in brief are the main facts in the public life of William Walter Houseal. Faithful to duty, he performed his life work in a quiet and ostentatious way. But in his private character, in his every day walk and conversation, shone the true nobility of his nature.
His was a life that deserves more than a passing notice^, for in it and from it many lessons may be learned that could profit others. He was an affectionate husband, a kind and indulgent father, a faithful member of the Church, and a true and generous friend. Ho was as gentle as a child and generous to a fault, always more willing to serve others than to be served by them. As a public officer he was faithful and painstaking. As evidence of his fidelity to duty, only a week before he died he got up from his sick bed and came down to assist in drawing the jury. He was faithful to his trust in whatever position he was placed, and went about its performance in a quiet, unobtrusive way. True to his church, he lived the religion he professed; true to his friends, many were his timely acts of kindness; faithful in all things, he was ready when the summons came.
(Information from: The Annals of Newberry Co., SC – O’Neall and Chapman, Aull and Houseal Publishers – 1892)
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